copilot
97 TopicsGenerating Videos in Microsoft 365 Copilot Using Visual Creator Agent
Video content has become an essential medium for communication, learning, and marketing. Microsoft 365 Copilot, combined with the Visual Creator Agent, is redefining the way professionals create videos. By leveraging AI-driven automation, users can generate high-quality videos with minimal effort. In this blog, we’ll explore how the Visual Creator Agent works within Microsoft 365 Copilot, its key features, and how you can use it to streamline video production. Full details in this blog https://dellenny.com/generating-videos-in-microsoft-365-copilot-using-visual-creator-agent/69Views1like0CommentsBlog about How to Use Power Automate to Automatically Send Copilot-Generated Tasks to To Do
Microsoft Teams Copilot makes it easy to track action items from meetings and discussions. By integrating these tasks with Microsoft To Do, you can streamline your workflow and stay on top of your responsibilities. With Power Automate, you can take this a step further by automating the process of sending Copilot-generated tasks directly to Microsoft To Do, reducing manual effort and improving productivity. This blog will guide you through setting up this automation. https://dellenny.com/how-to-use-power-automate-to-automatically-send-copilot-generated-tasks-to-microsoft-to-do/37Views0likes0CommentsBlog about How to Enhance Prompts in Copilot A Guide for Project Managers
AI-powered tools like GitHub Copilot are transforming software development by assisting developers with code generation, debugging, and documentation. While Copilot is primarily used by engineers, project managers (PMs) can also leverage it to streamline project workflows, improve communication, and enhance productivity. The key to getting the most out of Copilot lies in crafting effective prompts. https://dellenny.com/how-to-enhance-prompts-in-copilot-a-guide-for-project-managers/19Views0likes0CommentsBlog and short video about: How To Document a Process Flow using M365 Copilot
Documenting a process flow using Microsoft 365 Copilot involves leveraging AI-powered tools within Microsoft 365 apps like Word, PowerPoint, Visio, and OneNote. Here’s how you can do it step by step in this video and in the blog https://dellenny.com/how-to-document-a-process-flow-using-m365-copilot/15Views0likes0CommentsBlog about How To Document a Process Flow using M365 Copilot
Documenting a process flow using Microsoft 365 Copilot involves leveraging AI-powered tools within Microsoft 365 apps like Word, PowerPoint, Visio, and OneNote. Here’s how you can do it step by step in this video and in the blog https://dellenny.com/how-to-document-a-process-flow-using-m365-copilot/147Views0likes0CommentsHelping users navigate the rebrand to the "Microsoft 365 Copilot" App
This app/experience was formerly known as the Microsoft 365 App or by many just as the Microsoft 365 homepage (especially in the context of the browser and URLs like Microsoft365.com). Now that it's been rebranded to the Microsoft 365 Copilot app, I'm curious to know how peers are adapting their support for end users in regards to this change. If you want users to head to this app or web location to use Copilot Chat (in one of its forms - web or work) there isn't really much issue ("Go to the Microsoft 365 Copilot app to use Copilot"). But what these other scenarios? In the browser/or desktop app "Go to the Microsoft 365 Copilot app to modify your M365 Profile "Go to the Microsoft 365 Copilot app to download the desktop Office apps" "Go to the Microsoft 365 Copilot app to access PowerPoint in the browser. In the mobile app "Go to the Microsoft 365 Copilot app to update that PPT you've been working on while you're in an Uber." "Go to the Microsoft 365 Copilot app to capture pics of whiteboards and add them to your OneDrive" All these scenarios really have nothing to do with Copilot, but you've got to use the Copilot app...a little awkward right? (p.s. trying not to incent a riot about MSFT's naming skills) What makes it downright silly is if you've suppressed Copilot all together for users for whatever reason, right? To my understanding even if you've blocked Copilot Chat in your org, this app is still called Microsoft 365 Copilot... If I've misunderstood anything about the situation, please educate me. Otherwise, I'd love some thoughts on the group on how you are or are thinking about navigating this awkwardness with users.63Views0likes0CommentsOptimizing Customer Network Connectivity for #Microsoft 365 Copilot
Network connectivity page in M365 admin center is the go-to place for tenant, network security administrators to review health and readiness of customer network connectivity setup essential for M365 applications. Problem statement Customers blocking WebSocket connections in their network infrastructure leads to broken experience for M365 Copilot users. Copilot uses WebSocket and tenant admins have no visibility into the failed WebSocket connections for their users, rendering the customer network setup not ready for Copilot roll out. Users with WebSocket connection failure will have a broken Copilot experience, here is a glimpse. We are pleased to announce the following new features in M365 admin center that are available to all customers. 1. Visibility into failed network connections for M365 Copilot Tenant admins can now see in Microsoft 365 admin center (Microsoft 365 network connectivity - Microsoft 365 admin center) when their network impacts user connections to M365 apps, including WebSocket connections for M365 Copilot. The new report shows failure rate percentage, also known as the error rate percentage, for failed HTTPS and WebSocket connections to customer facing M365 Unified domains such as *.cloud.microsoft, *.static.microsoft, and *.usercontent.microsoft. A high error rate in this report indicates blocked network connections that impacts connectivity for various M365 applications and calls for immediate action from the tenant admin to allow blocked connections. 2. Visibility into user network latency for M365 Copilot Tenant admins can now view the network assessment points for Microsoft 365 Copilot, the assessment points are based on the network latency experienced by Copilot users. The lower the network latency, the higher the network assessment points for Microsoft 365 Copilot, providing a clear picture for tenant admins about the high network latency experienced by their users for M365 Copilot. In addition to the above, we recently announced M365 network connectivity test tool for individual users to test and validate if they successfully meet the network connectivity requirements for M365 Copilot. Additional reading references: Learn more about the connections blockers report Learn more about network assessments Learn more about M365 admin center network connectivity407Views1like0CommentsWhy Microsoft 365 Copilot Works for Some and Not for Others
Some people get great results from AI tools like Microsoft 365 Copilot. Others struggle to make Copilot useful. As an article by a Microsoft product manager points out, the reason might be the way we use Copilot. If you don’t give Copilot the right data to work with and don’t ask the right questions through well-structured prompts, there’s no prospect of good answers. https://office365itpros.com/2025/02/20/make-copilot-useful/30Views0likes0CommentsDisable Copilot in Microsoft 365 Personnel et Famille
Hi, I was particularly annoyed to see the Copilot icon appearing recently on all products (word, excel,...). Impossible to disable it on Mac. Particularly bugging as I definitely do not want to either test or use Copilot. What can be done? Or when the issue will be solved? BR38Views1like1CommentSharePoint Agent use in Microsoft 365 Copilot
The article below mentions that agents created in SharePoint will also be able to use Microsoft 365 Copilot in the future. When will this be the case? Thank you for any appreciated answers. Andreas Frequently asked questions about Copilot in SharePoint149Views0likes1Comment